"Read me while you walk. Hold me while you stand. Put me down while you take a pause."
In the introduction, Alice Twemlow and Tânia A. Cardoso write:
“What might be considered the research output of a walking practice? Where and when does the research occur in relation to the walk, the walking and the walkers? Does the walk activate our senses, or do our senses demand that we walk?
What and where are the objects and subjects of a walk? How might walking help us emphasise our connection to the more-than-human world? What are the entry points to a city through walking?
How might walking provide a path toward more socially just urban spaces and commons?”